Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Tue, 03/23/2010 - 11:11am
04/15/2010 7:00 pm
04/15/2010 8:00 pm
Yogi Berra once said: “If you come to a fork in the road, take it.” But
for lifelong baseball aficionado Emma Span, it hasn’t always been that
simple. Now, in this winning collection of essays, Span chronicles her
love of the sport, from childhood hobby to full-blown obsession, from
big break (becoming The Village Voice’s first staff sports
reporter in years) to heartbreak (getting a pink slip within a year).
She recounts elbowing her way to get a quote from Yankees captain Derek
Jeter and waiting for Mets pitcher Pedro Martinez to put some pants on
for an interview. She literally gives her lifeblood to see the Mets and
hops a plane to Taiwan, home to perhaps the largest concentration of
Yankees fans outside of the five boroughs. But after getting laid off
and being forced to leave her press pass behind, Span wonders if her
passion for the sport will fade. Highly unlikely. Baseball helped Span
forge a lasting bond with her father, connect with total strangers, and
endure even the toughest times. With a fresh voice, a devastating wit,
and an alarmingly encyclopedic knowledge of the game, Span offers a new
perspective on America’s favorite pasttime—as a journalist, a baseball
nerd, a daughter, and a fervent stay-until-the-last-out fan.